The Credibility of Informality

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The Credibility of Informality THE CREDIBILITY OF INFORMALITY RETHINKING “INEFFICIENT” PROPERTY RIGHTS OF LAND, HOUSING AND INFRASTRUCTURE Special Session at the PLPR Annual Conference 22-23 Feb. 2017 Hong Kong Cover design: Ben Davy THE CREDIBILITY OF INFORMAL INSTITUTIONS ORGANIZED BY RETHINKING “INEFFICIENT” PROPERTY RIGHTS Peter Ho [email protected] OF LAND, HOUSING AND INFRASTRUCTURE Rachelle Alterman [email protected] Informal institutional arrangements are often seen as an impediment to development and planning. Yet, they often produce villages, PARTICIPANTS neighborhoods, businesses, or transportation modes around the globe. Ben Davy Their legal statuses vary considerably from country to country and from [email protected] case to case: Some are illegal only in “theory” because they arise in countries where the planning and legal systems are grossly dysfunctional Erez Tzfaida and fail to supply reasonable living and employment; others do violate [email protected] planning or property laws in some ways and degrees. Geng Hui Zhi [email protected] Informal development is often labeled as inefficient, “perverse”, or at most, “second-best” as compared to “best”, formal and codified property Ka Man Leung [email protected] rights. Yet, the experience in various settings – developed and developing alike – has demonstrated that informality might actually perform an Kees Krul important function amongst social actors, which does not substantially [email protected] detract from the legal, institutional performance in a social, economic, Li Sun cultural, or even environmental sense. [email protected] The session challenges conventional views by posing that such informal Michael Kolocek arrangements as they have emerged and persist in space and time are, in [email protected] fact, functional, and thus should be regarded as credible. To this end, the session aims to bring together scholars from various disciplines – planning, Richard LeGates law or related disciplines – in order to examine functional informalities in a [email protected] variety of contexts. We welcome contributions studying land, housing and Shen Lu infrastructure from all parts of the world, regardless whether these are [email protected] based in the developing “South” or the developed “North.” Slavka Zekovic [email protected] Tamara Maricic [email protected] Sponsored by ERC RECOLAND Project Xiaoling Zhang www.recoland.eu [email protected] Ying Zheng [email protected] SCHEDULE Wednesday 22 nd Session 1 chaired by Peter Ho 10:45 – 11:00 Opening notes “Credibility of Informality” Peter Ho 11:00 – 11:20 Functional informalities? Planning and property rights in Bedouin municipalities: VENUE between indigenous customary law and modern state law Erez Tzfadia Knowles Building 11:20 – 11:40 Form follows function? – Property in land and the mystery of informality Faculty of Architecture Ben Davy 11:40 – 12:00 The Credibility and Institutional Function of Small Property Rights’ Housing in The University of China Hong Kong Li Sun and Peter Ho 12:00 – 12:30 Discussion and remarks by Zhang Xiaoling Session 2 chaired by Rachelle Alterman 13:30 – 13:50 Institutional credibility of real estate property rights in urban China: the perceptions and the conflicts Ying Zheng and Peter Ho 13:50 – 14:10 Housing and informality from the perspective of human dignity Michael Kolocek 14:10 – 14:30 Factors affecting informal housing price discounts at city and estate level in China Shen Lu 14:30 – 14:50 Who owns China’s Housing? Institutional archaeology of urban & rural realty Peter Ho 14:50 – 15:15 Day’s closing remarks, discussion and group photo Thursday 23 rd Session 3 chaired by Benjamin Davy 8:30 – 8:50 Rent Determinants of Sub-divided Units – Informal Housing Market in HK Ka Man Leung 8:50 – 9:10 Institutional framework and massive illegal construction in Serbian cities Slavka Zekovic and Tamara Maricic 9:10 – 9:30 Belgrade Waterfront Project as Instrument of Urban Transformation and Legal Changes of Urban Land Market Slavka Zekovic and Tamara Maricic 9:30 – 9:50 Understanding Compensation When Use Rights in Rural Land in China are Changed Hui Zhi Geng, Nan Li and LeGates Richard 9:50 – 10:15 Session’s closing remarks and discussion Peter Ho ABSTRACTS Functional informalities? Planning and property rights in Bedouin Session 1 municipalities: between indigenous customary law and modern state law Tzfadia, Erez Local Bedouin municipalities in Israel’s southern district employ informal spatial and non- spatial arrangements. We argue that these arrangements, albeit inefficient administratively, aim at restraining structural tension between indigenous customary law and modernstate legal authority, andbetween original Bedouin and their historically subordinate fellaheen Bedouin group. Generally speaking, the original Bedouin are the traditional landlords and they live in (unauthorized/informal) villages that surround the recognized Bedouin towns. The Israeli law rejects the Bedouins’ traditional property rights. Most of the fellaheen live in planned towns, and formally lease state land. They do not claim traditional property rights, yet they do recognize and abide with the traditional property rights of the original Bedouins. For example, the local authority of Kseifa, which we focus on, prevents any development of (formally) state land whenever that land is owned by Bedouin landlord under their traditional customary law. This informal arrangement prevents the development of almost 90 per cents of the land in town, yet protects the (informal) property rights of original Bedouins. Many of these Bedouins live outside the town, yet formally are registered as town dwellers, thus enjoy voting rights in local elections to protect their interests in land. That is to say – inefficient yet credible. We frame the conflicting socio-spatial-legal divisions and the resultant spatial and non- spatial arrangements as grey governance. The concept of grey governance highlights the spatial dimension of local government that is manifested in contrasting spatial divisions of space and forms of production of space between models of governance of traditional societies and those divisions of the modern state. In the case of Kseifa it highlights several spatial and non-spatial practices in the fields of provision of municipal services to informal villages outside the jurisdiction, construction of municipal infrastructure there, municial elections and distribution of political power, have all been adopted by the municipality and the town residents as well as by non-town residents as inefficient formal but credible informal practices. Form follows function? – Property in land and the mystery of informality Davy, Ben In a previous paper, Sony Pellissery and I have suggested that informal settlements be construed as manifestations of an ‘everyday social contract of informality’ that frames the production of non-state welfare in densely populated urban areas in the global South (Davy & Pellissery 2013). This idea fits well with the credibility thesis. According to Professor Ho’s version of the credibility thesis (Ho 2014), the nature of institutions is determined by being endogenous, ever-moving, and resulting from disequilibrium. Formal property relies on an exogenously established, robust equilibrium. If we apply the credibility thesis to property rights in land, we must expect informal property—dedicated to the production of non-state welfare—to perform more credible than formal property. This conclusion, of course, goes against the grain of Western property theory (e.g., Blackstone 1766; Epstein 1985; Honoré 1961) as well as prevailing law and economics doctrine (e.g. Coase 1960; von Hayek 1976). Most prominently, de Soto (2000) stipulates an increase in wealth, efficiency, and economic growth as a result of the formalization of property rights. Recognizing the value of informality, from the perspective of these mainstream thinkers, is unwise. The contradiction presents to us a myste ry of informality: If informal institutions are more credible than formal institutions, why did Western economic and political systems waste so much resources on the creation and maintenance of formal institutions, such as property rights in land? In a soft reading of Davy & Pellissery 2013 and Ho 2014, informality is not always more credible than formality, but only under certain circumstances. As theory building goes, the soft reading is a bit disappointing. Under what circumstances does informal property prevail over formal property? I hope I can think of an answer until the Hong Kong conference! The Credibility and Institutional Function of Small Property Rights’ Housing in China Sun, Li and Ho, Peter Discussions about informal housing in developing, emerging economies often revolve around the need for prohibition, privatization and formalization. Private title is seen as a guarantee against indiscriminate expropriation leading to tenure security, better access to infrastructure, utilities and mortgage, and higher investments. However, the argument that formalization and privatization out of necessity lead to better rights of otherwise “victimized slum-dwellers” can be questioned. In addition, prohibition of informal housing can marginalize socially weaker groups, while drawing on critical resources for enforcement. We argue that to avoid externalities, one first needs to probe into the function of existing property rights before considering institutional form, irrespective whether formal or informal. China’s extra-legal
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